NAGB chief curator looks
for potential links for regional artists abroad!!
Chief
Curator of the National Art Gallery of The Bahamas (NAGB) Holly Bynoe has been
seeking new opportunities for local and regional artists abroad. Invited to
take part in Caribbean Focus, the British Council’s international curatorial research
trip, Bynoe traveled to Scotland, last month with a cohort of eight other
curators and cultural workers from the Caribbean, South and North America and
India for 10 days of researching and networking.
NAGB Chief Curator Holly Bynoe presents an
overview of her work at the British Council International Curatorial Research
Trip.
The
connection with the British Council was made at a Tilting Axis conference held
in February of this year at Fresh Milk Art Platform in Barbados. Bynoe is a
co-founder of Tilting Axis, an ongoing series of conferences and discussions
dedicated to developing infrastructure between independent art organizations
across the Caribbean, U.S., E.U. and Asia. In hopes of engaging with the
Caribbean cultural industry, British Council representatives attended the
conference and returned to report to Juliet Dean, visual arts advisor at the
British Council.
While
the spring and summer months were filled with travels and changes, particularly
as Bynoe joined the NAGB as chief curator, the British Council was set on
returning the hospitality. In late September, Bynoe was invited to travel to Glasgow
to share her work and mission with others from across the region and Atlantic.
“I
think it’s good to figure out how the British Council wants to participate in
the Caribbean cultural sphere,” said Bynoe. “When you are a post-independence
Anglophone territory, it comes with a deep suspicion. But it seems as though
they want to facilitate a connection between the UK, and the Caribbean. A
stream to support exchanges, collaborations, mentorship programs and direct
linkages with institutions within the Caribbean is what they want to achieve
and build on.”
Sponsored
entirely by the British Council, the trip was an exploratory one, and Bynoe
hoped to see how the council’s interests would align with her own as curator of
the NAGB. The group’s primary objective was finding out more about contemporary
art practices and the creative sector in the UK, and in return, the curators
presented individual overviews of their work.
Bynoe hopes more of Graham Fagen’s works like
this, “The Slave’s Lament”, will travel throughout the Caribbean.
Bynoe
is well connected throughout the region. In addition to being the NAGB’s chief
curator, she is editor-in-chief and founder of ARC Magazine, meaning that she
has dedicated herself to travelling the region, fostering relationships with
artists, curators and art institutions. This has been done in an effort to
promote artists from the Caribbean and contemporary art movements in the region
on a larger platform. Still, Bynoe knew no one other than artist and Alice Yard
administrator Christopher Cozier, whom she met when he curated an exhibition
showing some of her works. The trip offered her the chance to build new
relationships from others with similar backgrounds. And with much of the work
in the Caribbean focusing on a shared history of colonization and the tensions
that come with it, a partnership with the British Council could be eye-opening
for many on both sides of the pond.
“I
just want to be able to show up and confirm commitment, because the British
Council has a vast wealth of infrastructural knowledge and connections, which
could be used in very specific ways to support either The Bahamas and the wider
Caribbean. So that’s my interest – figuring out where I can intersect and develop
collaborations,” Bynoe explained.
Graham
Fagen is one example of the ways individual artists can benefit from the
exchange. Fagen has already made a name for himself internationally, having
represented Scotland at the Venice Biennale this year. His work now reflects
his studies in the history of slavery and cultural trauma for those on both
sides of the Pond. Fagen has been deconstructing the ways we contemplate and
represent slavery and it is anticipated that his pieces will travel throughout
the Caribbean region.
The Seventh National Exhibition, which opened
last December at the National Art Gallery of The Bahamas, was curated by Holly
Bynoe and Michael Edwards.
According
to Bynoe, the British Council’s interest in the visual art arena in the
Caribbean should be viewed as something that local and regional artists should
tap into.
“The British
Council showing an interest in the visual art industry in the Caribbean is a
profitable moment for artists, as we will benefit from the council’s
infrastructural support,” she said. “In a way, they are looking at a more
holistic way to define their support… all granting organizations have their own
inherent agendas, so defining our independence and agency within this is going
to be crucial and challenging.”
For more
information on the NAGB and the ways it is forging connections with
international creative spaces, visit its website, www.nagb.org.bs,
or Facebook page, or call 328-5800.
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